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Germany’s highest court rejects VW’s bid to suspend emissions audit

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FRANKFURT: Germany’s highest court has rejected a bid by Volkswagen AG to suspend the work of a special auditor appointed to investigate management’s actions in the “Dieselgate” emissions scandal.


A three-judge panel did not give an opinion on the merits of the case, in which VW argues that the naming of the auditor by a lower court violated its fundamental rights, but did dismiss the firm’s request for an injunction.


“The constitutional complaint that has been filed is neither a priori inadmissible nor is it obviously ungrounded,” the Constitutional Court panel said in the five-page ruling.


It added, however, that VW had not “convincingly made the case for an immediate decision”.


A regional court appointed the auditor in November, in a victory for shareholder groups that want to establish whether VW bosses withheld market-moving information about the manipulation of vehicle-emissions tests.


The court in the town of Celle ruled that VW could not appeal against its decision.


The auto maker views the appointment of the auditor as a violation of its fundamental rights, a company spokesman said on Friday.


VW admitted in September 2015 to installing secret software in hundreds of thousands of US diesel cars to cheat exhaust emissions tests and make them appear cleaner than they were on the road, and that as many as 11 million vehicles could have similar software installed worldwide.


Shortly after the Dieselgate scandal broke, VW hired US law firm Jones Day and advisory firm Deloitte to investigate the circumstances of its wrongdoing and who was responsible.


Although VW had pledged to improve transparency, it never published the findings that were used as the basis for a $4.3 billion settlement with the US Justice Department.


Investor groups seeking billions in damages from VW are trying to establish when VW’s executive management board first became aware of cheating in the emissions tests and whether it disclosed possible financial damage to investors promptly.


German securities law requires companies to publish any market news in a timely fashion.— Reuters


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